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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Saturday, January 27, 2001 |
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He belongs to the new league
HE WOULD easily pass for a modern day executive. Immaculately
dressed, the dapper Arie Adrianus Van de Zouwen would look
anything but a conventional coach on a football field. But then
he belongs to the new generation of Holland coaches. And perhaps
it had to with his new thinking that Arie, as he introduces
himself can plan strategies that sometimes defy conventional
understanding. Like the way he shuffled the players, changed a
neatly combining bunch in the Hong Kong team, to which he is
attached for four months now, for the key match against Jordan in
the Group III league of the Sahara Cup football tournament in
Margao.
On the eve of the Group matches, it was thought that Hong Kong
would be the whipping boys for the other two teams, Jordan and
Romania. But a refreshing display of enthusiasm, speed and ball
skills against Romania in its opening match brought a different
focus on this squad, of which not much had been heard of in
recent times in the Indian sub-continent but yet is just a few
rungs below India in the FIFA ranking. The slow build up from the
midfield and rapier like touch in the attack was a revelation.
Hong Kong lost that match but the way Kwok Yue Hung scored two
goals and the intelligent mid-field passing by Yeung Ching Kwong,
Romania encountered problems aplenty at least initially. However
the physically stronger players and their ability to force their
way in helped out Romania in the final analysis but Hong Kong
earned applause even in its loss.
That performance put into perspective coach Arie's statements
earlier that he was trying to infuse a new approach in Hong Kong
players. ``Perhaps you will see them yourself'', he was to say
with that air of someone who means business. Just when the small
gathering at the Nehru Stadium in Fatorda expected Hong Kong to
do more than being a `surprise package', the team played below
par in what was a crucial match against Jordan. That was when
Arie's thoughts were totally at variance with others seeking to
know why he had to shuffle a good combination and also keep out a
man, who was the brain in Hong Kong's scheme of things against
Romania. ``Our priorities are different. We wanted to give every
player a chance'', he was to surprise enquiring mediamen. Clearly
Arie's sights were set not on the Sahara Cup but on something
bigger, the World cup qualifiers in March when it faces
Palestine, Qatar and Malaysia.
``Two good matches'', that was what Arie had decided once it
became known that Cameroon will not be there. Thereafter get back
home, make some additions and deletions in the squad before
further friendlies are planned. Before coming to India, Hong Kong
had drawn with UAE, beaten Singapore 1-0 and lost to Estonia 1-2.
``There is much to be done to put Hong Kong on the path to
progress'', Arie said of his challenges ahead, but he is finding
the new job encouraging. ``It is always a challenge to take up a
new team and have your influence on every aspect of team
development than be in control of a side which had everything
already set'', the Dutch said of his present assignment after
tenures earlier in Zambia and Singapore.
What is great about Arie is his past and the way he was inducted
in to the prestigious Royal Dutch Football Academy. ``I did not
come up as a player but as a Youth coach of Fayenoord FC first,
then as its Under-18 and reserve team coach'', he said of his
early foray into the game. ``My work was appreciated by the Dutch
football authorities and they allowed me to do the professional
coaching course, which normally is reserved for former
internationals. I passed out along with Gullit and Koeman'', he
said with a sense of pride. This assignment in Hong Kong was
following a FIFA- inspired report by Dr. Venglos, a renowned name
in international football coaching circles, on ways to improve
football there and his suggestion that Holland coaches would be
useful to make his short term project take shape. ``This is the
first time that the Royal Dutch Football Academy has been asked
to develop the game in a country in this region'', he said.
Arie grabbed the opportunity and along with him there are four
other countrymen of his to jointly take up what at present is a
five-year project. Coming from a land, where football is a
passion, Hong Kong seemed a far cry, so to say. ``Ground
facilities are less, public patronage poor and professionalism
does not exist'', he said of his initial impressions. Then again
the question of choosing mainland (China) players, a touchy
subject, had to be resolved. It was decided before long that
there would be only two mainland players, the rest would be from
the local pool.
So it had to be a brick by brick start that involved not only
picking up players but helping them condition both in terms of
diet and physiology. Then came the toning up of skills and
strategies. Here, Arie recalled a funny incident during his
selection of players from the various league teams, ``I had
dropped players who had a big standing in local football and also
taken players who would normally not come into national
reckoning'', he said with a chuckle. That is how Chan Ho-Man, a
key player in the team now had come in.
In the next few months, Arie and his team hope to plug a few
loopholes to enable the senior team to provide promise for the
future. But surely the total football concept, which Dutch excel
in will have to wait.
As Arie foresees, in the next two years at least the youth level
development would have been restructured and it was from there
that Hong Kong football resurrection had to be seen.
The Dutch coach said if Holland was a football force in the world
it was because of the emphasis given to youth development where
the stress begins from the kids level. Big clubs like Ajax and
Feyenoord, for instance have been successfully running their
youth football development for over 15 years now. ``Our football
is still good although most big players go to various leading
Clubs in England and Italy because of big money and that
sometimes affects national team selections. But no question, we
are as good as 20 years ago'', he said.
S. R. SURYANARAYAN
Chennai
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